What nonprofits must learn from Amazon, Uber, and Tesla

06.29.2017 Posted by NetHope Blog

By Lauren Woodman, CEO

This is the first in a series of blog posts that will explore the factors that drive digital technology and how NetHope will lead and support it.

When Amazon announced recently that it was buying Whole Foods, many marveled at how a company that started as an online book seller had become so broadly diversified. Twenty years after its founding, Amazon has revenues of $136 billion per year, attracts 130 million customers per month to its U.S. site alone, and has disrupted countless retail segments previously thought to be protected from online competition. Immediately after the purchase announcement, shares of Walmart, the largest grocery retailer in the U.S. with 14.5 percent of the market, fell 7 percent. In sharp contrast, Amazon stocks rose to an all-time high.

Even the most stalwart, seemingly ironclad of companies is falling to digital disruptors. Last month, the giant U.S. automaker Ford ousted its CEO, Mark Fields, amid growing concern from its Board that the company wasn’t moving fast enough to compete with new market entrants like Google, Apple, or Uber. Tesla, the electric-car maker founded just 14 years ago, has a higher market valuation than any other U.S. automaker. Ford sold 1.9 million vehicles; Tesla just 76,000.

It has become cliché that “tech is disrupting every sector.” That’s true, but it’s more than that. Technology is pervasive in every sector, even if the consumer or the employee doesn’t see it. Somewhere along the line, technology has changed every sector.

But today, simply using technology effectively to accomplish a given task is an insufficient strategy for survival, much less success, in any sector. Literal translations, mere automation of an analog task – whether it’s submitting expense reports online, using robots to pack a box, or using a mobile device to collect data – are not enough. Organizations that are successfully navigating these rapid changes are digital: they have deeply integrated technology into every aspect of their business. They have upended existing processes, prioritizing not only efficiency, but reimagining the very core of how goods and services are developed, delivered, and serviced.

Survey: 70 percent of our members lack digital strategyDisruption is well-established in virtually every industry, but the nonprofit sector seems to have not gotten the message. Only 52 percent of nonprofit executives believe that digital disruption will have a significant impact in the near future. A recent survey of NetHope members suggests that 70 percent of our members do not have a digital strategy.

This is a mistake. Logic tells us that there is no reason why the nonprofit sector should be immune from disruption, especially when everything from taxis to postal services to manufacturing has already been radically transformed. Academic research validates that assumption: according to INSEAD, one of the world’s leading business schools, sectors that are opaque, have rigid processes, or are inefficient are ripe for disruption. Others note that the lack of management agility and the rate of change in addressable markets directly affect a sector’s vulnerability. Both models suggest that nonprofits are vulnerable.

The benefits of digital transformation for our sector – and more importantly, for those we serve – is significant. Simplified access to services, data-driven interventions, and more nimble response are easily-identified improvements for those we serve. Stronger partnerships and greater flexibility among sector participants would lead to greater efficiencies, in turn freeing resources for greater impact.

Leadership, organizational capacity two biggest barriersLearnings from the private sector suggest further benefits. Companies that have embraced digital have higher market valuation, greater revenues and profits, and higher customer satisfaction. The same NetHope survey suggests that many nonprofit leaders are unable or unwilling to embrace these changes: leadership and organizational capacity were the two biggest barriers to digital transformation, identified twice as often as funding or access to technology.

Encouragingly, there is a growing recognition that for the nonprofit sector to benefit fully from the power of technology, we have to tackle the challenge proactively. We have to learn from other sectors, not just in terms of technology usage, but to understand how related efforts – organizational and leadership development, capacity-building, innovative financing – can be leveraged and increase the impact of the critical work that benefits so many.

Over the upcoming months, we’ll explore through this blog series the various factors that are driving rapid digital transformation and how we at NetHope will support our members in embracing change. Building on our 15-year history of collaboration and our deep relationships with digital leaders, we’ll explore how our sector has, and must continue, to change. Perhaps most importantly, we’ll work together to ensure that our organizations are well-positioned to thrive as the nonprofit sector and the communities in which we work evolve. This journey of transformation is exciting and promises to benefit those who receive aid and those who work so hard to deliver it.

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